1st Edition

Latins and Greeks in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204

    254 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1989. This volume includes twelve of the main papers given at the Joint Meeting of the XXII Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies and of the Society for the Study of the Crusades and the Latin East held at the University of Nottingham from 26-29 March 1988. The Conference brought together a wide range of scholars and dealt with four main themes: relations between native Greeks and western settlers in the states founded by the Latin conquerors in former Byzantine lands in the wake of the Fourth Crusade; the Byzantine successor states at Nicaea, Epirus, and Thessalonica; the influence of the Italian maritime communes on the eastern Mediterranean in the later Middle Ages and the Renaissance; and the impact on Christian societies there of the Mongols and the Ottoman Turks, as well as the perception of Greeks and Latins by other groups in the eastern Mediterranean.

    Chapter 1 From Byzantium to Latin Romania, David Jacoby; Chapter 2 The Establishment of the Latin Church in the Empire of Constantinople (1204-1227), Jean Richard; Chapter 3 Greeks and Latins After 1204, Michael Angold; Chapter 4 Between Romaniae, Paul Magdalino; Chapter 5 Western Attitudes to Frankish Greece in the Thirteenth Century, Malcolm Barber; Chapter 6 The Medieval Towers of Greece, Peter Lock; Chapter 7 The Latins and Life On the Smaller Aegean Islands, 1204?€“1453, Anthony T. Luttrell; Chapter 8 The Genoese in the Aegean (1204?€“1566), Michel Balard; Chapter 9 The Cypriot Nobility from the Fourteenth to the Sixteenth Century, Benjamin Arbel; Chapter 10 The Mongols and the Eastern Mediterranean, David O. Morgan; Chapter 11 Holy War in the Aegean During the Fourteenth Century, Elizabeth Zachariadou; Chapter 12 The Image of the Byzantine and the Frank in Arab Popular Literature of the Late Middle Ages, Robert Irwin;

    Biography

    Benjamin Arbel, Bernard Hamilton, David Jacoby.